location Definition

A generic term that refers to an assignable physical resource in the interior of an Intel device.

You can assign a node or entity to one of the following locations:

MAX® II and MAX® V

Cyclone® IV

Stratix® IV

Stratix® V

An individual logic cell

An individual logic cell

An individual logic cell

An individual logic cell

An individual I/O pin

An individual I/O pin

An individual I/O pin

An individual I/O pin

A LAB

A LAB

A LAB or MLAB (Stratix®IV)

A LAB or MLAB

 

An M9K memory block

An M-RAM or MLAB, an M512 or M4K, or M9k or M144K memory block

M20K or MLAB memory block

 

A PLL

A DSP block

A DSP block

A Custom Region

A Custom Region

A DSP block multiplier

A DSP block multiplier

An I/O bank

An I/O bank

A PLL

A PLL

An edge

An edge

A SERDES receiver

 
 

A multiplier block

A SERDES transmitter

 
 

A register

A Custom Region

A Custom Region

   

An I/O bank

An I/O bank

   

An edge

An edge

       
 

A GXB receiver channel (Cyclone® IV GX)

A register or a GXB receiver channel (Stratix® IV)

 
 

A GXB receiver (Cyclone® IV GX)

A GXB receiver (Stratix® IV)

 
       

You can make assignments to locations using the Assignment Editor, the Timing Closure Floorplan, or the Chip Planner. You can also make assignments to regions or custom regions, which are multicell locations, in the Timing Closure Floorplan Regions window. When you assign a logic function to a general location such as a LAB, row, or column, the Compiler can choose the best logic cell or embedded cell within the LAB, row, or column to use to implement the logic. When creating location assignments for M512 memory blocks, M4K memory blocks, M-RAMs, M9K, M144K, M20K, or MLAB, you should only use legal node names, and not the names found in the Fitter RAM Summary section of the Report window.